MR-2/8/07The The basic ancient work on Bactria was Apollodorus of Artemita, Parthika (1st century BC; now lost), which was used by the Augustan Age Greek geographer Strabo and the contemporary Latin historian Pompeius Trogus. The latter’s work survives only in Justin, Epitome (3rd century AD), an account that concentrates on the dramatic reversals of fortune in Eucratides’ career—e.g., his escape from Demetrius’s siege and his tragic death at the hands of his son after his Indian conquests. The classic modern discussion of Eucratides is W.W. Tarn, The Greeks in Bactria and & India, 2nd 3rd ed., rev. (19511997). Later works build on Tarn’s account or reject parts of it; these works include A.K. Narain, “The Greeks of Bactria and India,” chapter 11 in The Cambridge Ancient History8, 2nd ed., vol. 8, Rome and the Mediterranean to 133 B.C.(1989), ed. by A.E. Astin et al., pp. 388–421; and H. Sidky, The Greek Kingdom of Bactria: From Alexander to Eucratides the Great(2000).